STS-65 was a Space Shuttle program mission of Columbia launched from Kennedy Space Center, Florida, 8 July 1994. The flight carried a crew of 7 and was commanded by Robert D. Cabana who would go on later to lead the Kennedy Space Center. STS-65 was an international science mission that carried the International Microgravity Laboratory (IML-2) on an 15-day mission. Columbia returned to the Kennedy Space Center on 23 July 1994.
Spacelab Module LM1 in Columbia's payload bay, serving as the International Microgravity Laboratory
Left to right - Seated: Hieb, Cabana, Thomas; Standing: Chiao, Halsell, Naito-Mukai, WalzSpace Shuttle program← STS-59 (62)STS-64 (64) →
STS-65 launch
Robert Donald Cabana is a former Associate Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA), NASA astronaut and non-flight-eligible management astronaut), and is a veteran of four Space Shuttle flights. He served as Chief of the Astronaut Office from 1994 to 1997 and as director of the John F. Kennedy Space Center from 2008 to 2021. He is also a former naval flight officer and naval aviator in the United States Marine Corps.
Robert D. Cabana
Robert Cabana in Firing Room Four observing the last mission of the Space Shuttle